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Protein Dynamics:Measurement and Meaning

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Kay et al., Biochemistry, 1996, 35, p. 361. Phospholipase Cg SH2 domain and ligand ... Using the previous equation, the two conformers in the free state are about 90 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Protein Dynamics:Measurement and Meaning


1
Protein DynamicsMeasurement and Meaning
Reading Not much! The textbooks dont cover
dynamics. There is a nice review paper here but
its already at a higher level than expected for
the course. Well keep it simple and Ill try to
annotate the slides well!
2
Proteins in motion.
  • At all temperatures above 0 K, atoms and their
    constituents are in motion.
  • Early protein NMR experiments detected
    ring-flipping motions of aromatic side chains,
    providing some of the first evidence that
    proteins are dynamic structures.
  • Modern spectroscopic, time-resolved
    crystallographic, and computational studies have
    detected complex side chain and backbone thermal
    motions over time scales ranging from picoseconds
    to seconds.
  • Chemical methods such as hydrogen exchange and
    disulfide trapping have probed thermal motions on
    longer time scales of microseconds to hours,
    revealing motional amplitudes as large as 1.5 nm
    on the millisecond time scale.
  • Proteins in solution undergoes constant random
    thermal motions within a stable equilibrium
    structure. These motions involve displacements of
    individual atoms, bonds, functional groups, side
    chains, local regions of the backbone, secondary
    structure elements, and entire folded domains.
  • Many proteins also undergo thermally driven
    transitions, called conformational changes,
    between two or more equilibrium structures.
  • Both types of motions can play important
    functional roles.
  • Random thermal motions act as a molecular
    lubricant during conformational changes, allowing
    the protein to sample conformational space.
  • Random thermal motions and the average
    conformation can both change substantially when a
    protein is modified by substrate or ligand
    binding, docking to another macromolecule, or
    covalent modification (such as phosphorylation).
  • Such changes often have important functional
    consequences for the tuning of binding affinities
    and the switching of regulatory proteins.

Joseph J. Falke Science 22 February 2002 Vol.
295. no. 5559, pp. 1480 - 1481
3
Time Scale of Motions
4
Dynamics of proteins
  • Slower domain motions on the micro- to
    millisecond time scale (ms-ms) are biologically
    very important, because they are close to the
    time scales on which docking, protein folding,
    allosteric transitions, and product release take
    place and are therefore associated with
    functional processes.
  • Three cases
  • Tight ligand binding
  • Allosteric Regulation
  • Enzymatic Function

5
Methods and Time-Scales
  • Simulation molecular ps to ns
  • NMR ns-ms
  • Temperature Jump ps ms
  • Stop-flow ms-s
  • Flourescence miscroscopy min-hours

6
The Role of Dynamics in the Life of a Protein
  • .

Unfolded to folded transition weakens binding via
DS.
Unfolded upon binding increases affinity by
minimizing DS.
Functional regulation by shifting equilibrium.
Enzymatic function by shifting equilibrium. S
substrate, Pr product
Nature 438, 36-37 (3 November 2005)
7
Timescale of some processes in proteins
Disulfide bridge rotations
Methyl group rotations
Aromatic group flipping Note the wide range of
rates.
8
NMR has advantages
  • Only method that can determine the dynamic
    parameters of an individual nucleus
  • Can be tuned to detect dynamic behaviour on very
    different time scales

9
Tight Binding to a Ligand
Proteins are generally tightly packed, except
around ligand-binding sites, which may be viewed
as packing deficiencies. These packing
deficiencies allow mobility of their perimeters,
which propagates through other parts of the
protein because they are so tightly
packed. Ligand binding repairs the packing
defect, leading to global protein rigidification
with concomitant entropy loss.
Ligand Binding Site
Protein
10
An example of protein-ligand interactions SH2
domain binding to pY peptides
Y75
R36
pY
M
V
Natural ligand pY- Met/Val X Met, KI
100 nM pY phosphotyrosine
Kristensen et al, J. Mol. Biol, 299, 2000, pp.
771
11
Backbone Relaxation Data
Ligand
- Ligand
More movement
ns-ms
More movement
ns
ms-ms
12
Ligand Binding Reduces Dynamics at the active
site.
Ligand
- Ligand
slow
medium
fast
13
Allostery Induced fit vs population shift
Allostery does not drive a system from one
conformation to another, but selects from a
number of available conformations.
Volkman et al, Science, 2001, 291, p. 2429
NtrC (receiver) inactive
NtrC (receiver) active
kinase
transcription
14
Allostery in a single domain.
phosphoprotein
Activated mutant
wt
15
Dynamics in Cooperative Binding
Ligand binding typically causes a loss of
entropy. If this occurs throughout the protein,
then there is no further loss of entropy when a
second ligand binds therefore automatically the
affinity will be increased. A general loss of
simply vibrational (fast motion) can create a few
kcal/mol of additional binding energy. DG -RT
lnKD 2 reduction in 400 aa protein ? 1.5
kcal/mol 4.5 increase in KD
Kern and Zuiderweg, TIBS, 2003, 13, p.748
16
Cooperative Binding of O2 by Haemoglobin
17
Take Home Lessons
  • 3D Structures provide only static, incomplete
    information
  • All processes are, by definition, dynamic!
  • Dynamic processes span an enormous range of
    timescales
  • Dynamics required for and may regulate molecular
    processes such as ligand binding, catalysis and
    allostery.
  • Rigidification of backbone commonly seen ?
    enhanced specificity
  • Sidechains
  • Rigidification ? enhanced specificity
  • Loosening ? less specificity
  • Conformational change usually means a shift in
    the populations of pre-existing conformations.

18
Sidechain Dynamics and Ligand BindingKay et al.,
Biochemistry, 1996, 35, p. 361
3
2
1
5
4
6
Phospholipase Cg SH2 domain and ligand
19
Correlation of Sidechain Dynamics with Affinity
of Ligand Binding
Less movement
More movement
20
How do we know that the 2 conformations are the
inactive and active ones?
Wt V115I D54E D86N D86N/A89T D86N/A89T/D86N/A89T15
I pNtrC
21
Global Dynamics of CypA
  • Cyclophilin A (CypA) is a proline cis-trans
    isomerase
  • Binding of CspA inhibits CypA
  • Study dynamics of free enzyme, enzyme-substrate
    and enzyme-inhibitor complexes using NMR.

22
Global Dynamics of CypA
Nature 438, 117-121 (3 November 2005)
Free
Substrate Bound
Free
Substrate Bound
Methyls showing conformational exchange.
The same residues undergo conformational exchange
in both the free and working states.
Amides showing conformational exchange.
23
Dynamic Exchange of 2 Populations
Free
Substrate Bound
By analysis of the NMR data it can be seen that
the protein is interconverting between two
conformations. Analysis of the chemical shifts
suggests that the two conformations in the free
state are the same as those in the substrate
bound state. The free state is undergoing
conformational exchange at about 1400 s-1. The
substrate bound state is undergoing
conformational exchange at about 2700 s-1. Using
the previous equation, the two conformers in the
free state are about 90/10. In the substrate
bound state they are about 50/50. The second
conformer is the one with bound substrate in the
trans (product) conformation. The substrate
catalysis rate is about 2500 s-1.
NMR Relaxation Dispersion data.
24
Large Portions of CypA Undergo Correlated Motions.
Mutations within and outside of the active site
all effect the dynamic properties of the same set
of amino acids
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